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FRESH CLUES: Suffolk County police investigating the Gilgo Beachbody-dumping ground released sketches yesterday of two additional victims, a woman and an Asian man. His remains were found garbed in women’s clothing. Also released were pictures of inexpensive jewelry found with the remains of a woman and a baby girl. Photo: VICTOR ALCORN

FRESH CLUES: Suffolk County police investigating the Gilgo Beachbody-dumping ground released sketches yesterday of two additional victims, a woman and an Asian man. His remains were found garbed in women’s clothing. Also released were pictures of inexpensive jewelry found with the remains of a woman and a baby girl. (VICTOR ALCORN)

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The burial plot thickens.

Baffled Long Island cops, desperate for fresh leads in the Gilgo Beach serial-killer case, released haunting composite sketches of two still-unidentified victims yesterday and images of jewelry worn by two other corpses.

Investigators said they hope the new clues will lead to a break in the 9-month-old case.

The first sketch was that of a 5-foot-6 Asian man between 17 and 23 years old, whose remains were found on April 4 with two missing incisor teeth and two missing molars.

And in a stunning twist, cops revealed that the lone male victim had been wearing women’s clothing at the time of his death — and likely worked as a prostitute.

Probers initially speculated that the discovery of the man’s remains was unrelated to the discovery of several slain female hookers along the desolate stretch of Ocean Parkway in Suffolk County.

Five of the 10 corpses have been identified as those of Craigslist prostitutes.

The man is believed to have been slain five to 10 years ago and showed sign of blunt-force trauma, officials revealed.

The second sketch is of a woman known as Jane Doe No. 6.

She stood about 5-foot-2 and was between 18 and 35 years old.

Her torso was found in Manorville in 2000 and forensic tests linked those remains to her head, hands and right foot, which were found along Ocean Parkway on April 4, cops explained.

It’s likely she also worked as a hooker, Suffolk Police Commissioner Richard Dormer said yesterday.

“Based on what we know of some of the other victims, we consider that this woman may have been working as a prostitute in New York City at that time,” he said.

And in another harrowing revelation, investigators displayed photos of cheap gold jewelry worn by another still-unidentified woman and her baby girl, whose bodies were also found on the beach.

The baby, who was between 16 and 32 months old, was wearing hoop earrings and a rope necklace.

Her mother was found with two bracelets: one with X and O charms and the other with stones made to look like diamonds.

The body of the woman was found near Jones Beach in Nassau County on April 11. Her daughter was discovered seven miles away at Gilgo Beach on April 4.

“Although we can not definitively say, it is likely that these two individuals are likely mother and daughter,” said Dormer, noting that they both wore similar, mass manufactured gold jewelry.

And the partial remains of a third female victim — unrelated to the woman in the sketch or to the mother — that was found at Gilgo Beach on April 11 has been linked to two legs discovered in a plastic garbage bag on Fire Island in 1996, cops said.

And yet another sketch of one of the unidentified victims will be released soon, cops said.

“We are asking for the public’s assistance and we’re asking investigators across the country to study the provided details and if they’re related to one of their open cases,” he said, adding there’s a $25,000 reward for information leading to an arrest.

Dormer said his investigators have still not determined whether the grisly finds are the handiwork of a lone mass murderer or several killers.

“Killer or killers, we don’t know,” he said. “It could be one, it could be more killers.”

Detectives have homed in on the seedy world of Internet prostitution as they attempt to identify the victims and their killers.

Dormer also said cops have been culling members of the escort business for tips.

“We feel their information would be very valuable in this investigation,” he said.

Still, Dormer strongly denied that the complicated investigation has reached an impasse.

“This investigation is not stalled,” he said. “This is not a television show where everything is solved in an hour. This takes painstaking hours of detective work, forensic work.”